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| Cirencester, looking east down Market Place. |
The Romans knew it as Corinium, Corinium Dobunnorum (after the local Celtic tribe the Dubonnii)
Religion, Creationism, evolution, science and politics from a centre-left atheist humanist. The blog religious frauds tell lies about.
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| Cirencester, looking east down Market Place. |
You just can't beat science.![]() |
| Malarial parasite, Plasmodium falciparum, in human blood. |
Early bioenergetic evolutionGuardian Angel; Bernhard Plockhorst (1825–1907) Licensed under Public domain via Wikimedia Commons. |
| Protoclaviger trichodens in Cambay amber Parker and Grimaldi, Specialized Myrmecophily at the Ecological Dawn of Modern Ants, Current Biology (2014) |
| Amir-Aslani, 37. Hanged for making "innovations in the religion", "spreading corruption on earth" and "insulting prophet Jonah" |
Trepezia flavopunctata. The largest species of guard crab. Photo: Seabird McKeon |
While the relationship between coral and crab has been known for a while, researchers have now found
Fundamentalist Mormons harvest the community garden along with their children at the Rockland Ranch community outside Moab, Utah, November 3, 2012. Photo by Jim Urquhart/Reuters |
One aspect of evolution which creationists either feign ignorance of or have been fooled by creationist pseudoscience frauds about, is how exactly one species 'transitions' into another over time, according to the scientific theory of Darwinian evolution. The same feigned or genuine misunderstanding can be seen in creationist circles concerning the evolution of an entire phylum or class from an earlier one.![]() |
| Dinesh D'Souza Source: Wikipedia |
| Jim Wells, DUP, Minister of Health for Northern Ireland |
| PHOTO: REUTERS/MAX ROSSI |
If ISIS’s God Were Real, Would I Be Obliged to Follow Him?| Darwin's "warm little pond" |
| Archetypal European hunter-gatherer |
Hacked photosynthesis could boost crop yields : Nature News & Comment
Brain drain: Are we evolving stupidity? - life - 20 August 2014 - New ScientistAnt with mite on its head, in amber. Photo: Jason Dunlop/Museum für Naturkunde, Berlin |
| Polypterus senegalus |
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Irish Cardinal Sean Baptist Brady arrives for a meeting at the Synod Hall in the Vatican, March 6, 2013. Photo: REUTERS/Tony Gentile |
We've just spent a glorious week in the South of France on the Côte d'Azur where the sun beats down from an azure sky on the more or less sun-tanned or sun-burned bodies, prostrate on the beaches wearing next to nothing and exposing skin normally hidden where the sun don't shine - and most of them European from further north.
'Wandering stones' of Death Valley explained : Nature News & Comment
Yawning Spreads Like a Plague in Wolves | Science | SmithsonianAround the turn of the century, the famous scientist Lord Kelvin created difficulties for evolutionists by presenting a number of powerful arguments against the long ages needed by their theory. In a widely heralded debate with the famous evolutionist Thomas Huxley, Lord Kelvin tore the evolutionists' position to shreds with simple and straightforward physical arguments that the earth and solar system were not old enough for life to have arisen by Darwin's proposed evolutionary process. Among Lord Kelvin's arguments on the age issue was the time factor for the sun's survival based upon Helmholtz's accepted model of gravitational collapse. Lord Kelvin had the theory of evolution on the ropes and had seemingly dealt the knockout blow.
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The German Cockroach, Blatella germanica. Image: Alex Wild/Visuals Unlimited/Corbis. |
| Blue-tailed-Emerald, Chlorostilbon mellisugus. Photo: Bjørn Christian Tørrissen |
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| Baka pygmies, West Africa |
Significance
Tropical rainforest hunter-gatherer populations worldwide share the pygmy phenotype, or small human body size. The evolutionary history of this phenotype is largely unknown. Here we studied DNA from the Batwa, a rainforest hunter-gatherer population from east central Africa, to identify regions of the Batwa genome that underlie the pygmy phenotype. We then performed population genomic analyses to study the evolution of these regions, including comparisons with the Baka, a west central African rainforest hunter-gatherer population. We conclude that the pygmy phenotype likely arose due to positive natural selection and that it arose possibly